Welcome to Maxx Adventure Travel
Sail Boat Index Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
Perfect Pairs: Love and Marriage, Horse and Carriage, Sail and Boat
from: Maxx Adventure TravelYou can't have a sail boat without a sail. It was the sail attached to a boat that provided humans with a new means of getting around -- a faster way than rowing. A boat without a sail, therefore, wasn't a sail boat at all. It's simple mathematics: sail and boat equals sail boat.
The sail is the horse power, the wind snarer, the trap for the wind. That said it's a question of how much wind to how much sail. Racing sail boats require more sail -- cruisers, less. In sailing, the boat's total sail area is a significant factor in ensuring the boat achieves its optimal performance.
It's sail and boat. It's also different kinds of sails and boats. There's the foresail or headsail, the Genoa (a large overlapping foresail), a headsail and a jib. These are arranged into what is called a "sail plan" in accordance to two competing forces: speed and convenience. A once simple matter of attaching a piece of material to a centre mast has become a more complex art as the boat shape and purpose varies.
The sail pattern varies in accordance with the boat's purpose. Is the sail and boat to be part of a racer, cruiser or both? If you decide to cruise, is it for the day, week or longer. Are you sailing along the coast, entering blue water or sailing half way around the world? If you plan to race what class are you entering? Will you be a Grand Prix contender, a weekend warrior or a club racer?
These factors, as well as the funds you have available, will dictate not only what types of sails you should have, but suggest the material of which they should be made. Do you need extra durable sails? Must they be more sophisticated? Do you need more sails or less? And, what about size and number of sails?
Racing boats carry more sail than cruisers. Two is considered the minimal for any boat. A sloop has one mainsail and one head sail on its mast. A cutter's mast supports a smaller mainsail and two foresails called a forestaysail and a jib. On ketches there are two masts. The mainmast has a mainsail and either one or two headsails while the mizzenmast supports a smaller sail and a mizzen staysail. The rig for a yawl resembles the ketch and the two masts of a schooner support a large mainsail aft and the small sails forward.
That is to say nothing of sail cloth although it enters into the sail and boat equation. A person can spend hours debating the merits of light-weather polyester versus tightly woven polyester versus laminates. Again, it all depends upon the purpose of the sail and boat combination. Choose the Kylar, Mylar, Spectra combination for racing, the more traditional tightly woven polyester and lightweight rip-stop nylon for the sails of cruisers.
Sail Boat Index News
Passenger tells of cruise trip from hell
AN Inverclyde holidaymaker today branded his illness-hit Canaries cruise 'the trip from hell'.
Read more...Martin County Community Calendar updated May 22
NEW Listings
Read more...Call for tribute to boat victims
TWO women whose relatives died in a Port Glasgow boat tragedy are appealing for a plaque in memory of those who perished.
Read more...Queen's Cup, to finish in South Haven this year, stays on course despite safety concerns
Although some major races are adding more strict requirements, the Queen's Cup race regulations will stay the same for the June race that ends in South Haven.
Read more...On a crest of a wave at Kip
AROUND 70 top flight teams from all over the UK and Ireland took part in the Kip Regatta last weekend. The event was organised by the Royal Western Yacht Club and has been running for more than 20 years.
Read more...Young Morrison gets tall ship tour
A YOUNG sailing enthusiast from Gourock was buoyed up after being given a tour on board a stunning tall ship.
Read more...
